Caddie Confidential: Inside Stories from the Caddies of the PGA Tour
Caddie Confidential: Inside Stories from the Caddies of the PGA Tour
“Nobody knows the game of golf like a caddie. The caddie sees it all: the unrelenting dreams, jaw-dropping victories, and soul-crushing defeats. They rarely receive credit when things go right and frequently take the blame when things go wrong, yet they are the invisible backbone of the game. Behind every top-10 finish, every Tour championship, and every missed cut there is a guy pulling clubs for his pro. “He is part-time meteorologist, part-time mathematician, and full-time therapist. He will deftly predict wind conditions; ensure that a superstitious player always has his lucky penny, nickel, or dime in his pocket before hitting the links; reserve unlucky No. 4 balls for pro-ams only; understand how the grass condition and growth pat
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Caddie Confidential: Sometimes Caddies Do Give A Shart,
I was caddying for Mark Rhode at the Greater Milwaukee Open back in the early 1980′s, and we had a very, very early tee time. The “luxury” hotel that I was staying in for about $18 a night did not have an alarm clock. I had no car and no ride to the golf course in the morning. But I had to show up to keep my job.
So after I left a local watering hole after last call, I walked and hitchhiked my way to the golf course and for there about 3:00 AM. I found a golf cart, and went to sleep. I was awakened by the sound of the mowers and the smell of the morning dew. I was on time for our pre-round practice session.
It was definitely not the best sleeping accommodations, but it ranked right up there with the YMCA in White Plains for the Westchester Classic, the $5 a night (Canadian) dorm room at Sheridan Nurses College for the Canadian Open, and Bruce Edward’s (Tom Watsons long-time caddie) van in a hotel parking lot. At least I never slept in a bunker at the golf course.
Such was the life of an aspiring, wet behind the ears caddie on the PGA Tour back before the creation of the all-exempt tour, Tiger Woods, and the huge purses we see on the tour today. Nowadays a caddie can earn a pretty nice living on the tour. The only problem is that it is much harder for caddies to get a long-time bag to work. As long-time caddie Butchie Vail told me at the Nationwide Tour’s Athens Regional Foundation Classic last spring, it is really brutal out there.
My experiences were limited to three summers in college because I decided trying to make money as a caddie was a heck of a lot more fun than working as a dishwasher in a local hotel restaurant (that job lasted three days). During those summers, I met some of the most unforgettable characters I have ever known, and had the time of my life. I told myself that I should right a book about it someday. Of course I didn’t.
But Greg “Piddler” Martin, longtime caddy of veteran tour player Dan Forsman, has taken the plunge. Caddie Confidential: Inside Stories from the Caddies of the PGA Tour(Triumph Books, 171 pages, ISBN-10: 160078190X, ISBN-13: 978-1600781902, April 10, 2009), released this past spring, is a collection of stories and anecdotes from a number of long-time tour caddies. For me, it was a very interesting read because I know many of the caddies offering stories for the book, or referred to in the book. Because I caddied alongside and against some of them, I am a perfect audience for the book.
People like me will know immediately who Woody Blackburn and David Thore are, and this gives context to the stories about them. But for today’s mainstream golf fans, the book may be a disappointment. Despite the title and cover picture, you may not get the stories you want to read. For the stories that are told, there is no real point of reference for the reader. A whole chapter talks about caddie’s nicknames. However, there are no photos of the caddies, so a golf fan could not distinguish them from any other caddie if they are at a tournament.
You are not going to read about how and why Mike “Fluff” Cowan got fired by Tiger Woods. You are not going to come across any really juicy tidbits about the big players (or even the not so big players) or the marquee caddies like Steve Williams. You are not going to get information on how much they get paid today.
The reason is simple: fear. Throughout the book, caddies talk about getting fired, how many times caddies get fired, and some of the silly reasons for getting fired. There is no way they can be as candid as people would want and still hope to get and keep a bag on today’s tour. The money is too good to pass up. That is their very simple reality.
If you want to read stories from what many would call a bygone era of golf, i.e. before the PGA Tour created the all-exempt tour and the purses grew to obscene levels, when players actually had to grind out a living, then the book provides some, but limited, insight into the men (mostly men anyway) and the experiences they have lived.
There is one story in the book that, at least for this reader, is pee your pants funny. Without going into detail, it is about a caddie that really gave a shart (and then some) to make sure he was to work on time.
While the book hints at potential “greatness” for the casual golf reader, it falls short by not telling the full story (or as Paul Harvey would say, “the rest of the story”).
For example, there is a story of a Tour player (one who I have always liked and is a fan favorite) who’s wife sent a letter out complaining that Tour caddies were making too much money. What the reader does not know is that this player’s first wife was often his caddy in an effort…
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|Not even worth reading in the bathroom,
I hope Greg Martin keeps his day job as a caddie, because his first attempt as an author was akin to marking a snowman on your scorecard. It appears that he spoke to many of his caddie buddies with a tape recorder, transposed it to print, and called it a book. There was almost nothing to tie all this together into an interesting story of the caddy lifestyle. Martin’s effort was pitiful, but he also received no help from the publisher.
I guess it’s all about making money, as Triumph Books (Random House) shamelessly used a picture on the cover of the caddies for Mickelson & Woods. Of course, there was next to nothing about either of those two golfers in the book. Does Steve Wiliams ever talk to the media about his boss? Of course not! Triumph could have had a real writer try to pull all the interviews together, but no.
It’s not too often I read a book this flat-out bad. Don’t bother even renting this from the library.
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|Slice,
Save your money. This is one of those “we can’t tell you the names or the real juicy stories so we are gonna put pretty much nothing but blah filler in this book” books. I know this is a short, non-complete review, but this book does not deserve my time or your time. Get Bud, Sweat & Tees instead.
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